San Francisco based Big Bridge, one of the most respected litzines
on the planet, carried a review of Unholyland by Philip Wells.

I was deeply moved by Unholyland - it has extraordinary energy, wit, knowledge, and beautifully marries the vernacular with rhyme. It reads beautifully and is like nothing else I've read.

Tom Paulin

Vale Royal moves with the ease and clarity of a fresh spring over ancient stones, making its myths casual even colloquial - an impressive achievement

Derek Walcott - on Vale Royal

It's often said, with despairing wit, that "if you understand Middle Eastern politics you've been misinformed."

However, Aidan Andrew Dun wields an unusual tool – a poetic scalpel – and he uses it to bring a wholly new perspective to what he calls the Unholyland.
Dun experiences gunship tyranny and random snipers and fragmentation bombs "that take away the souls of their victims" but importantly, he leaves you with striking images of transcendent unification. He builds up to a movig union between Jew and Arab in a Burning Man-style Peace Circus in the Sinai, after first sweeping you up in a vivid ride – a pyrotechnic, apocalyptic dance – through these uniquely benighted, maddened and mystifying lands. It is a powerful meditation on the place where civilization began and where it could end.

Heathcote Williams - on Unholyland

Dun stands apart from all schools and schisms...He is the carefully regulated trickle of water that cracks stone.

Iain Sinclair - Lights out for the Territory

He has an extraordinary sense of the past. He’s one of those people, along with Blake and Chatterton and others, who are like a divining rod for history.

Peter Ackroyd - on Vale Royal

Aidan Andrew Dun is a poet ... in the tradition of William Blake, and has a vision of London - and indeed of the world - which draws strength and fire from that association. He is simultaneously a one-off and in excellent company.

Andrew Motion

Aidan Andrew Dun is a visionary, a pied piper of modern poetry...

Kate Kellaway - The Independent

It seemed until recently that the long poem in English was not possible any more; then there suddenly appeared a series of celebrated poetic narratives and sequences. Aidan Andrew Dun reinforces this development with McCool: a sequence of enormous power that welds together myths and stories in a form that speaks to our times. It is an energetic and compelling magnum opus, striking out in new directions.

Bernard O'Donoghue, Poet & Fellow of Wadham College, Oxford

Universal makes a fitting retort to recent suggestions that contemporary poets are not facing up to the big questions. Basil Bunting famously said of Pound’s Cantos, “There are the Alps, fools”; well, here are the Himalayas.

John Greening - Times Literary Supplement

Vale Royal ... has a heroic tale attached: there were 21 years between its conception in a London squat and publication. Perhaps this long genesis has helped give the poem that moral authority of a literature won from experience.

In these 92 pages of vivid, unrhymed triplets, its author reveals himself as a genuine visionary, a Celtic Christian mystic whose symbols can be as powerful and memorable as Bunyan's, whose faith in his own understanding of the world is a strong as Blake's, whose anger at social inequity is as strong as Shelley's:

It is dark down here. The light is bad.
It is London in the olden days, take care.
But nothing here is real without belief.

In two cycles, chiefly through the persona of a poet hero as Blake, Chatterton or Thomas the Rhymer, Dun retails a profoundly personal, supernatural history of London. His is a spiritual and symbolic view of the world's most complex city, from her fabled Atlantean foundation by Brut the Trojan - millennia ago on the site of Kings Cross - to her dark, desanctified modernity.

In an epic both deeply idiosyncratic and inescapably public, Dun reminds us of our golden potential, our spiritual hunger for justice, of our forgotten archetypes, King Lud, Boadicea, Constantine the Great, Arthur, the Grail, Old St Pancras Church and the foundations of our Christian Celtic glory.

Vale Royal rewards many readings. An enduring mystical epic has been added to our literature.

Michael Moorcock - The New Statesman

Vale Royal pulls back the veil and descends into the city's underbelly like a latter-day Inferno - peeling away layers, not only of its past but its mythology, the mysteries of its soul. Take off your shoes in KIngs Cross.

Josephine Balmer - The Observer on Sunday

Aidan Dun, softly-spoken performance poet and musical troubadour, has, with Blue at the Throat, an epic trip to regale.

For this is an hour-long poetry performance interspersed and yet fused with simple acoustic guitar songs; an hour of astonishing relentlessly grand eloquent lyrical beauty and impenetrable mystical, historical and spiritual complexities. It is a performance in six sections, though (these) almost seamlessly fuse... while Dun, resplendent in flowing white cotton, prowls around the stage pouting furiously like Mick Jagger's long-lost brother. But though he looks and almost acts like a rock-star, his music is more of a folky orientation and his poetry defies categorization or description.

This is a fantastically concentrated, meandering, richly-textured production, at times so intellectually intense its meaning is too multi-levelled to to be even partly understood, yet at other times concise, thoughtful and full of meaning.'

A former protégé of Walcott, Aidan Andrew Dun is younger than the other poets reviewed here and far less known. Published in beautiful editions by Goldmark, a branch of the art gallery which also first discovered the equally numinous prose of Ian Sinclair , Dun operates almost completely outside the orthodoxies of the poetry world. Yet his poetic concerns are similar to his mentors; Vale Royal, Dun’s first long narrative work, unearthed a mystical Arthurian quest in north London, presenting an unlikely but nevertheless compelling spiritual journey through the literally and mythological landscapes of King’s Cross. His latest work, the verse novel McCool, transposes Homeric epic, Gilgamesh, and Irish myth to a near-future world of constant warfare in the Middle East, employing like Vikram Seth before him, Pushkin’s challenging sonnet form from Eugene Onegin. As in Vale Royal, Dun’s technical virtuosity and compelling sense of place underline a unique poetic vision, well worth exploring:

June in the vast metropolis.The city like a sinking shipdives in a flame though an abyss of houses, towers; seems to slipdown an incline of despair,through a filthy atmosphereof getting as opposed to giving…

Dun is another poet concerned with the loss that comes with experience, of a world once known, a loss of innocence. Their joint comfort for such loss is a strong sense of place, a sheltering ground, whether Derry, Cork, St Lucia or London. But for poets, sanctuary can be found not just in a place to enter but in a text to inhabit. And if their work is haunted by the knowledge that civilisations might fall and their literature become redundant, they understand, too, as all these collections prove so conclusively, that from the rubble of the old, new – and equal – texts emerge, the latter energising and refreshing the former. As Derek Mahon confirms in ‘A Country Kitchen‘ , dedicated to Seamus Heaney:

if a thing happens once

it happens once for ever.

Josephine Balmer, from a review in Agenda of the latest works of Walcott, Heaney, Mahon and Dun.

This poem (Universal) is noble, both in conception and execution, a dense weave of lived experience, serious philosophical and theological questioning, humour, knowledge of many different spiritual and cultural traditions, evocations of spectacular inward and outward journeys.

Hilary Davies - The London Magazine

(Reviewing 'Return of the Reforgotten' at the Albert Hall)

If there was such a show (as Top of the Poets) Aidan Dun would be on it. He looked more like a rock-star than McCartney, woodpecker hairdo, big scarf, carefully-untied boots and a Spanish guitar.

Michael Ellison - The Evening Standard

'Vale Royal.' Say it aloud: the words are like footfalls...

The strangest element in (the poem) is its narrator. The challenge is to see how he gets his bearings and to hear correctly his voice, which is humble and yet omniscient. If it is possible to be lost and found at the same time, then this is how (Vale Royal) makes one feel. The effect is achieved by contrasts: the writing is constellated but earthed. (The poem) is curious in the antique sense of the word; the elaboration comes not through vocabulary but through the serpentine patternings of the three-line verses... shot through with colours: green, silver and gold, as though the whole poem was a glittering snake. (Here) is an uplifting sense of recovery, of salvaging a city by believing in it. Aidan Andrew Dun is a visionary, a pied piper of modern poetry.

Kate Kellaway - The Independent

'An epic dream... Dun's vision of a spiritual temple-complex of international arts, music, healing and devotion ... recognizes the sacred energies of the area (of Kings Cross, where) according to the poet, the magician Merlin is sleeping... somewhere under Filthy McNasty's Whiskey Cafe in Amwell Street - waiting for a millennial wake-up call.'

Peter Culshaw - The Big Issue

Verse novel is back in the spirit of Blake
Poetry's the new rock'n'roll, so no wonder verse novels, last in fashion around the time of Eugene Onegin, are on the rise too. Aidan Andrew Dun has just published an epic poem, McCool, with Goldmark Books. Dun is pretty McCool himself, as when he launched his first book Vale Royal, he read extracts at the Albert Hall joined, in his last ever public appearance, by Allen Ginsberg.

McCool is a contemporary story set in 2011 after a Western invasion of Lebanon. Heroine Galatea is an art-journalist whose head is turned by war-painter McCool.

Aidan Andrew Dun's fans include Derek Walcott and Andrew Motion, Iain Sinclair and Peter Ackroyd. He is, says Motion, "a poet who places himself in the tradition of William Blake, and has a vision of London - and indeed of the world - which draws strength from that association. He is simultaneously a one-off and in excellent company."

Londoner's Diary - Evening Standard (Feb 5, 2010)

Aidan Dun has brought verse into the 21st century. He is a wild alchemical genius polishing language till the light shines through, fierce and brilliant. McCool is a poignant yet beautiful meditation on our post-catastrophic culture. Heaven and hell swirl through each other in this lattice work of mythic meanings, modern yet ancient, terrifying yet redeeming. Aidan's hyper-modern cosmology resonates with characters that echo the complex songs of the heart. Through a masterful melting together of elementals, Aidan's words bring us back to our senses.

Peter Maravelis - City Lights, San Francisco

Again, Dun has told an epic tale in verse that is more than verse. Fusing elements of Gilgamesh, the Fenian cycle and Eugene Onegin, McCool is strikingly modern. 21st century art, war and love are explored in a 'white goddess' poem with London and Heliopolis as mystic backdrops. This is Byronic cinema.

Niall McDevitt - On MCCOOL

Sustaining and relishing the sonnet form throughout and telling such a brutally real yet imagistically exquisite and mythical tale in such a fresh, witty and deliciously modern way confirming him as the bravest, most lucid and deepest lyrical voice writing today.

The Fire Poet, Philip Wells - on MCCOOL

Mccool is masterly in the best sense of the word: an epic of sustained pyrotechnic brilliance.